An homage:
Perched atop a mountain on a cold January day, with our friend Bryan from the Philly area in town on his own and welcoming a home cooked dinner, I decided there was plenty of time for me to make the dish my friend Erin describes thus: “like strong, lasting relationships, this recipe takes time.” What an advertisement, huh?
I won’t paraphrase much more because I’d really prefer that you instead check out her blog, Breathing and Cooking, https://breathingandcooking.com/ and specifically this recipe: Port and Cherry Braised Short Ribs.
If you know me at all, you may have already heard me complain (as many folks do) about recipe/food blogs and the anecdotes that precede the formula. In fact, it is one reason why my own blog is so sparsely populated, because I tire of even my own kitschy chitchat. And yet here I go! So, while I DO wholeheartedly recommend that you read the entire entry on Erin’s blog first, on the actual day you need to make this recipe, I’d hit the “jump to recipe” button (thank God for those!) unless you plan on setting an alarm and getting up extra early that morning. But read it, do. Before it’s time to make the dish. Because in addition to the fact that this was the first meal she ever made for her hubby Eric (and the first dish she made for we Tweardys! She loves us! She really loves us!) There’s plenty of thoughtful and necessary information about how to make this dish a success. I will be honest though, and it will not surprise you to know that I very rarely do that. I’m a “jump”-er. However, I have low-key chops in the kitchen after so many years of having a healthy appetite paired with anxious, neurotic emotional spaces to fill. We have both amateur and professional chefs in our family as well, so I’m intuitive on the full backstory of advice for most recipes. But Erin is a friend, I’ve eaten at her table and breathed in her yoga class and as of today, we even share a hairdresser (shoutout to https://www.todaysheadlinesalon.com/), so I owe her my undivided attention on this one, and I give it wholeheartedly.
Erin and I have much in common: we both like to cook, we are interested in sustainable whole foods for health, we love yoga and in fact, we both teach yoga…we enjoy similar music (we once ran into each other when my number one songstress Lori McKenna came to Cleveland, and that says a lot!) and wine, we cry rather easily, we have achieved grandmother status, and…then there are all the ways we differ. Erin is blonde, and pretty, and lithe, and well-mannered, soft spoken. Erin’s kitchen and tools and methods (“mis en place,” which happens to be tattooed on my Chefew’s arm) are those of a patient and expert preparer of food. Oh, and she bakes. For restaurants, even. I, on the other hand, differ in that I am (ahem) brunette, loudly robust and raunchy, and I am the messiest and laziest ad hoc cook on the planet; impatient and haphazard. Oh, she wears an apron, by the way. I just buy new clothes instead.
Therefore, when I decided to make her elegant but earthy recipe live from Wilkes County, North Carolina, I thought it might be fun to do it her way, but also to share how I do it my way, so that if you too struggle with the details…we can have some fun together.
This dish is already in the oven as I begin typing this – while the process is still fresh in my memory and ongoing (there’s sauce to finish, among other things,) I’m going to pull up Erin’s blog on my phone and comment as I scroll though on the what and how of what I did, vs. the what and how recommended…remember that brief show, “Whatever, Martha!” where Martha Stewart’s daughter and her sidekick watched episodes of her mother’s TV shows and kind of…mocked? Well, I won’t be mocking, exactly. Not much, anyway. Especially if you consider the angle that I’m truly mocking my own self rather than Erin, who is doing things correctly. But she has a sense of humor, and let’s all just acknowledge that hers is the correct way before we begin. But there’s more than one way to skin a cat, in most cases. And no cats will be harmed in either version of this recipe.
*Short Ribs – Erin specifies that there are two types, flanken and English. I can report that at the closest available meat counter to me from my mountain perch, there are not two types at all. Check. Long or short? Mine are long. Check check. Bone in or out? Bone in. Check check check. See how I’m not even digressing into 7th grade humor about the long and the short of the bones?
*Onion, carrots, celery – the classic mirepoix. Your grocery store will probably have them already cut up – feel free to use those, NO shame!! Unless I’m truly strapped for time, I almost always cut up my own as I did today. For one thing, I find the precut to be a little dryer, a little staler, and probably more expensive. And one more plastic container to dispose of. Hippie. While we are on the subject, I prefer to buy loose carrots and celery, organic carrots with the green still on when possible. Yes, I know how precious and privileged that makes me sound, and yet not as elite as Erin’s talk of her favorite dried cherries, which we will get to later, so I’ll allow it.
(I want to take a moment to talk about the enameled cast iron Dutch oven. I didn’t have one until I was about 40, and I didn’t procure one “because you’re supposed to have a Le Creuset…” that part is up to you. I do own one of those, but the one I used for this recipe is another brand and I can report that they both perform equally well. They’re heavy, they do everything, and they clean up easily. Martha Stewart has one, Bobby Flay, mine is Food Network, Sur La Table…you decide what you need, mmmkay?)
*Garlic – I smashed and minced here, but I often use a garlic press. Erin linked to her favorite, but I have a favorite too and it is the Pampered Chef version – you don’t even need to smash and peel first with that one! I remember a funny meme about garlic being high maintenance, each clove with it’s own little paperwork…
*Port – Tawny or Ruby? My store had both, Erin prefers tawny, so that’s what I purchased. RIP Tawny Kitaen. My wine department had three brand choices…I definitely did not buy the cheapest. But you totally could, yes you could! Since I like wine in general, and I like wine in cooking, I do know that reducing wine makes what you like or dislike about it more prominent. I would say go for the mid-level. (Don’t tell my husband, but I bought the expensive one. It still wasn’t that much.)
*Beef stock – Erin makes her own. I have made my own. But not in a very long time. I buy organic beef broth and if there’s time and inclination, simmer it with some spent beef bones and aromatics. Blah blah blah.
*Bay leaf, parsley, thyme, rosemary. I LOVE fresh herbs, but I often use dried – if you’re not totally prepared for anything and everything, you gotta use whatcha got. At this moment and location, I do happen to have fresh rosemary and thyme in a pot right outside my sliders, and when spring comes – parsley can join that party.
*Butter. Butter. Just use the butter. If you’re going to use a butter substitute, please…don’t use it at all. If you’re fancy…pure Irish butter for me.
*Dried cherries – see Erin’s blog! I did not have time to order her heirloom fancy cherries (link in her recipe), but I will look into it for the future. I see why she buys them in bulk, they’re expensive to ship for just a bag or two! However, her point about them not using seed oils or sugar is important to me. Meanwhile, I hunted for dried cherries in vain at my local store here and didn’t have time to look further. No dice, the only cherries were sweetened, which we do NOT want for this dish anyway…I even checked for frozen, and those were sweet cherries as well (not sweetened, but sweet, and I was craving the tartness and the dried texture and flavor). Egads, what to do? Here’s what I did, and the results remain to be seen. I bought an organic, single ingredient tart cherry juice in a jar. That was almost as expensive as a bottle of wine. And some fresh frozen cranberries. I plan to use a little combo of the two of them to almost imitate what I will be missing with the dried cherries. The cherries are literally in the name of the dish, a major ingredient, but Bryan from Philly won’t know and neither will my husband, so I consider this to actually be a grand time to perform this particular experiment. So, let’s gooooo!
Mis En Place – whatever, Martha.
Preheat the oven – always a must, truly.
Scrap bowl – what lil’ dynamo Rachel Ray used to call the “GB” – garbage bowl! This is a worthy idea for a messy cook, rather than with full and filthy hands trying to use your foot to open your trash bin where your husband has just tossed all the half-opened mail so that when you let go of your scraps, they slide onto the floor anyway and you find yourself stepping on yesterday’s coffee grounds and…
Sear – This step is so important, especially the meat being room temp before the beautiful crusty caramel sear. Here, even impatient MB is patient – you want the meat itself to have that texture, color, and flavor, and you also want your sauce to include flavor from the deglaze. You don’t want steam, therefore, so dry and season the meat and don’t crowd the pan – patience isn’t just for waiting to turn the ribs, but also might be for more ribs to wait their turn, if you need to sear in batches. I’ve crowded the pan in haste before and always regret it.
Add the port – deglaze. This is actually fun but again requires patience for the reduction. Even the spoon-test for thickening is fun!
At this point I had to stop for my new favorite snack – cottage cheese sprinkled with cracked pepper and just a tad of cayenne! Congratulations on a comeback year, cottage cheese! Together with sourdough starter discard, you’ve really lived up to your potential lately, if the internet is to be believed.
What’s up with the cork? I hadn’t heard this before, but Erin claims to have read that adding a cork to a braise would add tenderness. Like her, I claim no shortage of corks but here in NC, my corks go into a lovely custom glass-fronted box which was a gift from our kids with a small hole on top to send the corks in…but no way to get them out. Different story if we were in Cleveland. Alas, no cork for my braise.
You’ll see other recipes for short ribs (and other meaty good things) calling for a 350 degree oven but believe Erin when she suggests 250 and “trust the process and walk away.” It works. After 2.5 hours, I went ahead and checked my ribs and decided to add another 30 minutes for good measure.
Once I let the ribs, removed from their silky pool, cool enough to handle, the removal of the bone was beyond easy. I used a sharp knife to separate a bit of the tougher fat and connective membrane near the bone and had really nice tender ribs left. I didn’t remove any liquid fat from the sauce because, well, #lazy. But if I had done the make-ahead directions, that would’ve been a no-brainer. And it would have helped the final product to be more cohesive.
At this point in the original recipe, the cherries are added to the sauce. So, this is where I added just a handful of cranberries. NOT Craisins, but fresh or frozen crans. I neglected to mention that I substituted about half a cup of the pure tart cherry juice (unsweetened) for that amount of the beef stock. I finished the sauce as the recipe specified and slipped the ribs back into their delicious bath.
What to serve with short ribs: I did old fashioned regular mashed potatoes, because I had russets on hand to peel. Typically, I would’ve enjoyed a smashed redskin (by the way, have you ever tossed a couple of handfuls of fresh baby spinach leaves into creamy smashed potatoes? Even with a glug of buttermilk? A trick I believe I learned from my sister Judy – it adds nutrition and color and is delish!) or polenta, but who doesn’t love mashed potatoes? Something green is good too – a warm kale Caesar?
Because men are messy and my table is sporting new cream-colored placemats, I plated these in the kitchen instead of lugging everything to the table. Looking at Erin’s original post, this is actually part of her advice! I did hit each plate with a sprinkling of chopped fresh parsley, but also with one of my favorite touches for hearty winter dishes – flash fried sage leaves! Speaking of messy – and blaming the men – the first time we were invited to gather around Erin’s dining table for this meal…guess who spilled the red wine? Yep, I’m the problem…it’s me. Thank goodness for Ruggable. Stemware is tricky.
My super rando iPhone photos will not make you want to prepare this dish, but Erin’s pictures will! I made the guys’ plates look better than my own but forgot to snap a pic until my own. You’ll notice her sauce is thicker – I think that’s the assistance of those blended cherries! Excuses, excuses!
Whose is whose?
Wanh Wanh Wanh…
Not everyone loves to cook slowly and patiently all day, but every now and then a day offers itself with the time and space to do that, and this is just the recipe for that day. With a mountain view and Lori McKenna’s music conspiring, I had my best day in weeks (don’t get me started on seasonal affective disorder) and this long-form cooking was just what I needed! Oh, and then you get to EAT it! Yum!
Wait, how did the substitutions go? I think it probably held up about as similarly to the original as it could be. I am such a lover of cherries, though, that I plan to invest in those bougie cherries for next time!













